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How to Startup and Keep Your Day Job

By Carol Tice Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Keeping your day job while starting a business is a tried-and-true way to ease into entrepreneurship without going broke. But it can also leave you bleary-eyed from lack of sleep and without even a shred of personal life.

That's a "recipe for disaster," says Kristin Cadinale, author of "The 9-to-5 Cure." Running a side-business or freelancing on top of an overwhelming workload is one reason to approach this scenario with caution.

Usually, the dual-work plan can only go on so long. At some point, you collapse, drop the business idea or cut the corporate umbilical cord and plunge into full-time entrepreneurship.

Here are Cardinale's tips for juggling your job and business:

Use technology. Consider buying a laptop, netbook or other mobile device so you can get a little business done at lunch or on the bus, ferry or train to and from work. Bring a smartphone along to handle your business calls; don't use the office line.

Tell your boss. Carefully weigh disclosing your side-business activities to your boss. If you're caught moonlighting at work and they didn't know, it could earn you a quick pink slip -- and you want to stay in control of when or if you quit the day job.

Don't overload. Don't exceed your capacity to handle clients for your business, or you'll end up disappointing them. Then you'll be one step farther away from being able to go full-time with it.

Explain your situation to clients. Be open about the fact that you may not be available during normal business hours.

Watch for burnout. You may only be able to keep this up for a short amount of time before you feel like you have no life whatsoever. When the schedule starts sucking all the joy out of living, it'll be time to make tough decisions about which side of your work life needs to go, the job or the business.

Have you juggled a day job and a business? Leave us your tips for how you handled it.

Carol Tice

Owner of Make a Living Writing

Carol Tice, a freelance writer, is chief executive of TiceWrites Inc. in Bainbridge Island, Wash. She blogs about freelance writing at Make a Living Writing. Email her at carol@caroltice.com.

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